Abstract

Despite general scepticism from care professionals, social robotics research is providing evidence of successful application in education and rehabilitation in clinical psychology practice. In this article, we investigate the cultural influences of English and Italian psychology students in the perception of usefulness and intention to use a robot as an instrument for future clinical practice and, secondly, the modality of presentation of the robot by comparing oral vs. video presentation. To this end, we surveyed 158 Italian and British-English psychology students after an interactive demonstration using a humanoid robot to evaluate the social robot’s acceptance and use. The Italians were positive, while the English were negative toward the perceived usefulness and intention to use the robot in psychological practice in the near future. However, most English and Italian respondents felt they did not have the necessary abilities to make good use of the robot. We concluded that it is necessary to provide psychology students with further knowledge and practical skills regarding social robotics, which could facilitate the adoption and use of this technology in clinical settings.

Highlights

  • The Socially Assistive Robot (SAR) is a fast emerging technology that has developed from the cross-over of social robotics and assistive robotics and involves robots that are designed to support people’s everyday lives through advanced social interaction (Feil-Seifer and Mataric, 2009)

  • For each participant we calculated the average scores of the items that constituted each of the eleven constructs of the UTAUT questionnaire, e.g., ANX score is the average of the ANX1, ANX2, ANX3, and ANX4 scores

  • With regard to the first hypothesis we made, an additional video presentation has a positive influence on Perceived Usefulness (PU) and Intention to Use (ITU) the robot, the result of our experiment demonstrates that, when a live demonstration and interaction session is available, a video presentation doesn’t significantly change the participant’s perception of the robot in comparison with a simple oral presentation by an expert researcher

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The Socially Assistive Robot (SAR) is a fast emerging technology that has developed from the cross-over of social robotics and assistive robotics and involves robots that are designed to support people’s everyday lives through advanced social interaction (Feil-Seifer and Mataric, 2009) Such robots are designed to help people through advanced interaction driven by user needs (e.g., companionship, physical therapy, daily living assistance, tutoring) via multimodal interfaces (speech, graphical gestures, and input devices) (Feil-Seifer and Mataric, 2011). These socially capable robots can assist in everyday human activities ranging from tutoring an elderly person in physical exercise, assisting either teachers in telling pre-recorded tales to pre-school. Xu et al (2015) investigated the influence of showing a video in an online review on consumer perceptions and decisions to purchase products and demonstrated that video as a format has a significant positive influence on consumer perceptions and their intention to purchase, and increases the perception of helpfulness/usefulness

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call